A data-driven Boolean model explains memory subsets and evolution in CD8+ T cell exhaustion.
Geena V IldefonsoStacey D FinleyPublished in: NPJ systems biology and applications (2023)
T cells play a key role in a variety of immune responses, including infection and cancer. Upon stimulation, naïve CD8+ T cells proliferate and differentiate into a variety of memory and effector cell types; however, failure to clear antigens causes prolonged stimulation of CD8+ T cells, ultimately leading to T cell exhaustion (TCE). The functional and phenotypic changes that occur during CD8+ T cell differentiation are well characterized, but the underlying gene expression state changes are not completely understood. Here, we utilize a previously published data-driven Boolean model of gene regulatory interactions shown to mediate TCE. Our network analysis and modeling reveal the final gene expression states that correspond to TCE, along with the sequence of gene expression patterns that give rise to those final states. With a model that predicts the changes in gene expression that lead to TCE, we could evaluate strategies to inhibit the exhausted state. Overall, we demonstrate that a common pathway model of CD8+ T cell gene regulatory interactions can provide insights into the transcriptional changes underlying the evolution of cell states in TCE.
Keyphrases
- gene expression
- dna methylation
- single cell
- immune response
- network analysis
- dendritic cells
- cell therapy
- working memory
- stem cells
- randomized controlled trial
- squamous cell carcinoma
- systematic review
- oxidative stress
- transcription factor
- young adults
- papillary thyroid
- mesenchymal stem cells
- heat shock
- type iii
- amino acid
- squamous cell